Donate SIGN UP

Is No Deal Now Innevitable?

Avatar Image
ToraToraTora | 20:32 Thu 21st Mar 2019 | News
107 Answers
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47660019
They'll only get the extension if Parliament approves the deal as is. That seems unlikely given the numbers, so shall I order the champagne for next Friday?
Gravatar

Answers

61 to 80 of 107rss feed

First Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next Last

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by ToraToraTora. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
A fortnight delay, for ? For the sake of having a delay it seems. Maybe it was one last defiance in light of Farage's speech pointing out rejection was in everyone's interest.
A bit longer in the hope of wearing everyone down.
Is Bercow allowing a vote anyway ? The anti-Brexit deal hasn't changed from last time, and presumably they have to be consistent.
Apparently Mrs May intends to get around it by insisting she has secured significant changes - the extension to A50 to delay Brexit.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-vote-deal-theresa-may-john-bercow-speaker-commons-eu-a8829316.html

The rules are all so very bendable!
After antagonising the MP's with her speech she has no chance of them accepting her deal.
//The rules are all so very bendable!//

Unlike the PM herself! Is she going to take up the offer of yoga classes?
I think she's succumbed to Diane Abbott syndrome. She's taken to speaking to everyone as though they're stupid. "I'm on your side". Not only a blatant lie, but patronising in the extreme.
Spooky Naomi,I have just referred to DA on a new thread!!
I don't see how anyone can claim that, that changes the actual deal.
More deceitful manipulation then.
ag, she haunts us. ;o)
og, what else would you expect?
Question Author
Jim: "Returning to the original question:"! - thanks, it is getting a bit off track. "no, it seems that No Deal is *not* now inevitable, as the EU Council has apparently proposed a draft statement granting the UK an extension to May 22nd if the Withdrawal Agreement is accepted, and to April 12th if it is not." - So if the deal is not passed, as looks favourite, we have an extra fortnight, to do what with? How will they stop "no deal"?

TTT //How will they stop "no deal"? //
I don't think that they can stop it.
Not a nice English sparkling wine?

Is that not the point of this farce?

I’m a bit late to react to douglas’s point but, no that is not the point. One of the points of leaving the EU is to enable the UK to buy its goods wherever it wants to without having to apply levels of import tariffs determined by the EU. Since its inception the EU and its predecessors were designed to protect the bloc from (what it sees as) unfair competition from abroad. At present the UK must apply this tariff (80% of which is then remitted to Brussels/Strasbourg) to any wine it imports. Only wines from the EU are tariff free. After we have left the EU (and its protectionist Customs Union) we will be able to import wine from outside the EU free of tariffs (if we choose to do so) so a level playing field for the global market will be in place.

Just to add a little more, the EU has provided millions of euros of funding into the development and promotion of European wine in recent years. but the UK has yet to see much from this. To date the funding channeled into English wine has been limited to small education programmes such as Wineskills and pockets of development funding for individual estates, including Hambledon. The sums involved have been in the thousands rather than the millions of euros that have been offered elsewhere in Europe. We can use part of our £13bn pa “subscription” (which kindly allows us to import EU wine free of tariffs) to develop our own wine industry.
Question Author
I will continue to drink proper "Poo" from our French friends as I enjoy other products from all over the wonderful continent we inhabit. I am a huge fan of Europe, the continent, hence, by definition, I hate the evil empire that is the EU that seeks to oppress it's wonderful diversity and shoe horn it into their sith like definition of one size fits all.
I thought that leaving with no deal on March 29th had been written into law by the Government. Can someone explain to me how Mrs May hasn't broken the law by extending A50 or am I being silly?
Question Author
they can use a statutory instrument to alter the exit date. A much shorter process than repealing it altogether.
OK TTT thanks.
Don't order the champagne just yet. There's a catch to this, which is that you only get the short extension if you agree the deal. Sounds pretty uncompromising.

What they didn't say was that if you don't agree the deal you get a long extension.

61 to 80 of 107rss feed

First Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Is No Deal Now Innevitable?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.